Ben Humphries on “Broad River Music”
Interviewed by Brian DeMarcus
From the booklet “Roots of Rutherford”
A publication of Isothermal Community College's Oral History Project
May 1985
Traditional music and the people of Rutherford and Cleveland Counties
who play it have long been overshadowed by the popularity of their
neighbors in the mountains. The mountaineers seem to have gotten most
of the credit for innovations in bluegrass and old-time country music.
But, if Ben Humphries of the Cliffside community has anything to do
with it, that image will soon change.
Humphries, who moved to Cliffside in 1937 from Cleveland County,
used to
listen
to people like Wendell Lipscomb and Junie Scruggs play music at his
Grandmother's get-togethers when he was a small boy. The impression
this music made on him has resulted in a lifelong love affair with
the music and the people who made it. His home is filled with box
after box of old 78 r.p.m. records by obscure musicians who have long
since faded from the memories of most music fans. Being a history
buff has made it easy for Ben to collect the music and the associated
stories.
One such story that was shared with Ben by Lewis Jolley tells about
Smith Hammett:
“Smith was a well-known clawhammer banjo picker at the time,
during the 'teens and 'twenties. One day a Black man came to the Flint
Hill School playing a three-finger picking style on the banjo. Smith
asked George Elam Scruggs if he could play that lick on the
banjo. George replied, 'No, I don't believe I can.' Smith said, I
can't either, but I will.' Within two to three weeks he was playing
that three-finger style. He perfected it and taught many people how
to play it.”
Ben says that Rutherford and Cleveland counties have long been a
“hotbed”of music. As far back as the late 1800s, people
such as Amos Owens from Cherry Mountain were having music get-togethers.
Ben describes a merger of musical styles:
“The mountain musicians moved to our cotton towns, bringing
their music with them. The tenant farmers had their music, too, as
did our local folks. The flatlanders were more liberal than mountaineers
and their music reflected a jazzier style. This music should have
been called Broad River music because of all the local talent. A merger
of these styles took place and out of that came people like Earl Scruggs.
This music was played long before Earl went to Nashville, but he did
popularize it to the masses. Earl pioneered so many things. Everything
today is loosely based on Earl's work. He is a perfectionist. The
whole Scruggs family was very musical. His older brother, Junie, plays
a mean banjo.”
Ben says he wants to honor Earl Scruggs for his contributions to
bluegrass music with an Earl Scruggs Day in the community. He admits
to not having gotten very far with it at the present, but still hopes
to put together in the near future.
One event that Ben has put together to honor local musicians is the
annual Snuffy Jenkins Old-time and Bluegrass Music Festival, now in
its eleventh year. Ben put this festival together as a tribute to
the contributions of Dewitt “Snuffy”Jenkins and his brothers
and nephew, Hoke Jenkins.
Snuffy is from the Harris community. He had a very musical family,
also. He and his brothers often played in a band together. They played
on the Crazy Water Crystals Bar Dance in 1934, which gave them nationwide
exposure. The Jenkins Stringband used to win every fiddlers' convention.
It got to the point where competing bands would hide the Jenkins brothers'
instruments so they couldn't win the contests. Ben says that the worst
part about the band was that they were never recorded. In 1937, Byrum
Parker, the “Old Hired Hand,”reorganized the band. Homer
“Pappy” Sherrill joined the Hired Hands in 1939 and still
plays with Snuffy. Greasy Medlin played with them for a long time
until his death a few years ago. Ben states that “Greasy was
a 'Toby Clown' who started in medicine shows. He had a natural ability
to ad-lib with an audience and his timing was perfect. He could captivate
an audience with his humor.”
Ben has collected ballads by local musicians as well. He recalls
one such ballad by Maxie Narvel and his father, called “I'll
Take My Cotton to Henrietta Mill.”Another is “The Ballad
of Daniel Keith,”about a man who was wrongly hanged at the old
jail. Legend has it that his shadow was seen on the jail walls for
years and that every business that tried to make a go of it in that
building went bankrupt.
Still another local ballad is “The Shelby Disaster,” by
a man named Hornsby. It tells of a bank caving in on August 28, 1928,
killing several people. Ben says on the back side is a song about
a Southern Baptist Convention treasurer who ran away with the money
and the secretary.
Through efforts such as Ben Humphries' to preserve the music of this
region, it can truly be said that a significant contribution has been
made to the musical world. As Ben likes to proudly state:
“If Bill Monroe is the Father of Bluegrass music, then Snuffy
Jenkins and Smith Hammett have to be the grandparents, and most surely,
Earl Scruggs is the Mother.”